31.1.15
Minnippi
25.1.15
Oxley
24.1.15
Trotter - in the rain again.....
17.1.15
The Survey & Minnippi
Fishing the Nerang River
http://youtu.be/ZiaK8FXteZc
Moggill State Forest
2.1.15
Minnippi
As I didn’t have a lot of time to
spare and things appeared to be pretty quiet all over the general area I
decided to re-visit Minnippi. On site at 6.00 and Pacific Koel calling near the car park. Walking in I noticed the
signs of recent flooding – presumably from the rain of the week before last.
What a contrast from my last visit – pools of water still lay in the grass
around the edge of the lake, itself full again after months of drying
temperatures. High tide marks well above the normal lake level showed where the
water had risen to; I was surprised as I didn’t think there had been anywhere
near enough rain to raise the water this high.
Despite the extra water the lake was
incredibly quiet – I only counted 4 Pacific
Black Ducks in total and they were not on the water. One Hardhead was, near the island, and a
handful of Little Black Cormorants
made up the only water birds. I wondered if the quality of water had suffered
as a result of the run off? The woods were quiet, but as I trudged through the
wet mucky grass a small number of White-throated
Needletails swished overhead heading, apparently, north. Later, however, I
noted the same number returning towards the southwest and circling over the
hills several kms away.
A pair of birds crossing the skyline
attracted my eye and they turned out to be Oriental
Dollarbirds and, below them another two individuals. All four birds were
flying directly north too – it seems early in the season for them to start
migration, but it was a very definite flight plan! Shortly afterwards two more
single birds also followed suit, while a seventh sat up in a dead tree calling loudly
as if encouraging them. I don’t think I’ve ever seen so many Dollarbirds in one
location in Australia.
That was about it for the mornings’
excitement. The airfield track was very quiet – and very wet - and I cut it
short at the first exit. I sat for a while at Stu’s Raptor Outlook but nothing
showed, no more Dollarbirds, no raptors, the heat was increasing and things
were shutting down for the day - even at 7.45…..5 White-faced Herons fished hopefully in a flooded area of grass
quite unconcerned by the passing hordes of fat busting joggers sweating past on
the bike track. I played for crakes & rails in the mangrove boardwalk with
no success and then headed off myself for my appointment at 8.30 and to vote to
get rid of the environmentally destructive LNP……..
White-faced Heron |
25.1.15
Oxley
Headed out alone to Oxley arriving on
site just before 6; a clear, warm morning, the rain of yesterday having passed
overnight. The grass in the paddocks had responded well to the recent rain and
had grown thick and high – much to the enjoyment of the resident cattle. The
storm damage of November is still evident with gaps in the tree line where a
number had been taken out and broken branches still litter parts of the bush –
the track is still officially closed, but it is obvious from the tracks that no
one is paying much attention to the signs and the gate was still open.
First good bird was a fly by Striated Heron on the river from the
pontoon – only the second I have recorded here.
As I stood scanning the river the second good bird flew straight
overhead - an Australian Hobby, which I saw again later perched up on one of the
dead trees in the paddock.
There were good bird numbers in the
first half of the track, but the second half was strangely quiet. Just the
usual stuff overall anyway and I reached the end of the trees without too much
more excitement. Just at the turnoff to the lakes a pair of Pale-headed Rosellas perched up on the
fence eating the heads off a patch of Scotch Thistles – if only there were some
Goldfinches around they would love these!
As I approached the water an older
man with a camera passed me on his return journey and advised me that ‘there’s a couple of Black Swans up there’
– I almost couldn’t contain my excitement and all I could muster was a muttered
‘Great!’ while I struggled to contain
the urge to do him harm……
There were indeed a couple of the
promised Black Swans (be still my
beating heart) and bugger all else – a few Pacific
Black Ducks, 3 Dusky Moorhens, 2
Australian Darters, a handful of Little Black Cormorants perched on the
sagging overhead wires, 2 Australian
Pelicans, 1 Coot and a couple of
Great Egrets was just about it.
However, on one of the small islands in the main lake a slowly moving shape
resolved itself into another Striated
Heron which was a pleasant surprise – and almost made up for the Black Swan
episode….
Heading back along the track not much
extra showed apart form a small flock of Blue-faced
Honeyeaters and a single male Mistletoebird
until a Pheasant Coucal decided to
sit up and wait patiently for my camera to complete its task. Quite a lovely
bird seen in good light!
Pheasant Coucal |
24.1.15
Trotter - in the rain again.....
Picked up Mr D at 6.00 and we drove
through a light drizzle to site at 6.00. Very heavy rain over the past couple
of days had caused minor flooding and small rivers to emerge again. So it
wasn’t a surprise to see a higher water level in the upper lake as we crossed
Priest’s Gully.
The drizzle had eased by the time we left
the car, but we carried waterproofs anyway. Down through the dripping trees, as
usual pretty quiet apart from a Wood
Duck up a tree calling hoarsely and, further down the track, an Eastern Yellow Robin and, surprisingly
new for me for site, a Rufous Fantail.
We turned left and walked along the fence line between the private properties
and the reserve seeing very little. A calling Common Bronzewing had us going for a few minutes as its repeated
call led us to think of Buttonquail, but after a tense few minutes of searching
it flushed and left us feeling a little foolish.
Down near the lake’s edge we came
across a Trotter bird-wave with a single White-throated
Treecreeper, a second Eastern Yellow
Robin and a Speckled Warbler.
At the upper lake and the water
levels obvious now – not much exposed mud but steep banks still clear of water
and plenty of opportunity for waders, snipe, duck – of which there were none at
all. A couple of Whistling Kites,
White-bellied Sea Eagles (one juvenile, I adult) and a pair of Variegated Fairy-wrens were all that
were seen before we reached the main lake.
The usual flock of Australian Pelicans, numbers reduced to
20 this weekend, a Great Cormorant
and a large group (approx. 80) of Little
Black Cormorants moved off the shoreline as we approached. Further down the
lake a pair of Great Egrets and a
single Intermediate took to the air
and around the corner a flock of 48 Hardhead,
a couple of Grey Teal and a handful
of Pacific Black Ducks huddled
against the shoreline. And that was about it, apart from a distant Caspian Tern, so we headed back into
the trees and up the return track. It started to rain again so we pulled on our
wet gear over our wet, sweaty shirts and trudged on, a Peaceful Dove called and a small flock of Little Lorikeets (11) flew overhead and we got back to the car
otherwise incident free.
Belesis again for the usual
breakfast.
17.1.15
The Survey & Minnippi
I reached the Rochedale property at
6.00 as agreed with Merhyl, chatted to her for a few minutes then walked
through the property to the far corner and back again over the survey period of
an hour. Numbers of birds appeared to be down on previous visits – especially
small passerines. I did see a couple of Common
Bronzewings which were a new bird for the site - and got a couple of shots
of one – and also added White-throated
Needletail as a flock of approx. 50 birds wheeled slowly across the sky
heading south east.
A couple of Pretty-face
or Whiptail Wallabies bounced
away through the trees, one sitting up with curiosity. There were a nice pair
of Australian Grebes on the dam,
along with a juvenile Dusky Moorhen,
and a Pale-headed Rosella was a late
addition right on 7am as I headed in to have coffee and toast with Merhyl
before going on to Minnippi.
8.15 and very hot – approaching 30+
degrees, still, calm, not a breath of wind, not a cloud in the sky, but the
humidity not too bad this early. In the M1 track there was no activity at all.
I noticed a fine rain falling under one species of tree, not sure if it was sap
or water, but it was an almost invisible shower of droplets falling in the
still air – weird. I followed the usual
route as far as Stu’s Raptor Lookout but didn’t go down the Airfield track.
Nothing too exciting to report – duck
numbers very low, no Grebes, few Cormorants, no Darters, even Moorhen and Swamphen numbers were low. Five Latham’s Snipe preening and sunning themselves along the edge of
the dried up middle pond won the award for ‘best bird of the day’ but were too
far away to film. A Tawny Grassbird
sat up well and provided scope for the camera, calling loudly and being, for a
change, quite confiding.
A couple of Noisy
Miners lay prone on the ground sunning or anting, not sure which, I thought
they were injured at first, as you do….even the Torresian Crows were feeling the warmth, sitting with drooping
wings and open beaks.
I played for Rails and Crakes in the
boardwalk – the tide was very high and I thought they might have been pushed up
the river bank, but no responses. Gave it away around 9.30 with little to come
away with and headed home to seek refuge from the heat.
10.1.15Fishing the Nerang River
Kerrod picked me up at 2.30 and,
after collecting the borrowed tinnie from Tingalpa, we got to The Spit at
Southport and tried the cast net for live bait – unsuccessfully. After grabbing
a Mackers dinner, and fighting the traffic, we finally launched the boat and
headed up river past the high rises. We trolled lures past a couple of bridges
and other underwater structures with no success and, as the light faded, we
again tried for live bait in a shallow back channel, Kerrod successfully netting 3 good sized Mullet.
We anchored up above the Monaco St
bridge and set out a rod each with a live Mullet while we bottom fished with
mullet fillet on a second rod. Kerrod landed a nice Mangrove Jack (on mullet fillet) while I managed only a small Fingermark Bream which went back to
live another day, along with a small Bream
Kerrod also boated.
http://youtu.be/McS4aXPx-LI
( If this link doesn't work - and it seems to be a problem - search Mangrove Jack and Nerang River on U tube)
( If this link doesn't work - and it seems to be a problem - search Mangrove Jack and Nerang River on U tube)
Around 23.00 we up-anchored and moved
to a ‘deep’ hole further up river. Within minutes of dropping our lines back in
I got smashed up by a presumed shark and again a few minutes later by a
possible Jack. Meanwhile Kerrod hooked and played a small (1 meter) shark which
we got to the side of the boat but were unable to actually lift it in as it
struggled and snapped, eventually breaking the line and swimming off. I,
finally, hooked and landed a good size Bream
which kept company with the Jack in the ice box.
We finally gave it away around 00.30
and headed back down river to the ramp, getting home just before 2.00.
Moggill State Forest
Stu was outside my place a couple of
minutes before Rob turned up at 5.30. We piled in to Rob’s car and arrived at
Moggill State Forest at 6.00. Heavily wooded track through a small steep sided
valley, shallow river bed alongside, with minimal water mainly from the recent
rain. Mixed vegetation types – mainly eucalypt with patches of viney type
undergrowth and some thicker stuff – yeah, I know, very descriptive……
The site has had its moments in the past with
both Southern Boobook and Powerful Owls seen in daylight, White-eared Monarch
and other local specialities. Today was a day for hearing – not my preferred
sort of birding due to my poor hearing, however, I struggled along, manfully
putting up with the continuous species identification by call by the other two.
I could, of course, hear the Pacific Koel, and the dozens of Eastern Whipbirds, the Sulphur-crested Cockatoos and the
distant Wonga Pigeon and I was the
first to call a Peaceful Dove, but
when it came to Brown Thornbills and
distant Common Cicadabirds I
couldn’t pick them up at all and it took me a while to link the White-throated Treecreeper calls with
the species – but then that always happens to me with WTT….I know that call, what is it? I know it, it’s……ahhhh,what IS that
bird….. Lewin’s? No, don’t tell me, don’t tell me, ….I KNOW it, I KNOW
it…….ahhhhh, tell me, tell me, Oh, yeah,
White-throated Treecreeper! Finally.
That link doesn’t work so well in my
head. (Some would say it’s one of many links that don’t work in my head….…but
they’re just being cruel)
Anyway we saw a couple of Cicadabirds high in a eucalypt, along
with a couple of Rose-crowned Fruit
Doves. Rob spotted a White-headed
Pigeon perched up quietly and shortly afterwards a pair of Shining Bronze Cuckoos displaying to
each other. It’s a good spot for Large-billed
Gerygone, Eastern Yellow Robins
and Little and Grey Shrikethrushes. It was a bit of a pigeon/dove morning with the
aforementioned plus calling Brown
Cuckoo-dove and Bar-shouldered Dove
bringing the total to 6 species.
We couldn’t agree on a place for
breakfast in the general area so repaired once again to Belesis for the usual –
although, much to my surprise, Rob choose avocado on toast in deference to his
waistline……
2.1.15
Minnippi
Muggy, quiet, still, warm at 6.15. 3 Channel-bill Cuckoos chasing and
calling raucously over the carpark. I tramp across the bridge noting a very
high tide still incoming, no sounds around the bridge this morning – no mud for
anything to appear upon….move on to the lake itself. A couple of sleepy Purple Swamphens standing in the weed
bed, a few nodding Dusky Moorhens
picking over the lily pads….lake level is up since last visit, but still low.
Into the M1 forest and nothing
moving. Cicadas in heat – their calls drowning out most everything so far as I am
concerned. (I have difficulty hearing anything if there is a background noise,
such as traffic, TV or…cicadas. Well…..according to some 'friends' I have difficulty hearing anything……..) I DO hear a Grey Shrikethrush and a Brush Cuckoo some distance away – must be loud if I can hear it - a Bush
Turkey crosses the track as I walk back out – not that common here,
surprisingly, so good to see.
Along the bush and back across to the
lake again, without incident.
8 Pacific Black Duck – Eight! There were in excess of 100 a few weeks
ago! No other duck in evidence, 1 single Eurasian
Coot, a few more Moor and Swamp Hens, no Grebes, no waders of any
description apart from 1 Latham’s Snipe
flushed by an idiotic Moorhen hell bent on beating up his mate – I think the
heat is getting to them. No clear answer as to where everything goes, unless
they head west when the rain comes? No Welcome Swallows or Martins, not even
any Willy Wagtails?
Up the hill and down to the Airfield
track – now model airplanes add their din to the background noise – Oh great, now what hope do I have of hearing anything?
Down at river level and a splashing
noise attracts my attention, push through to the river bank and ripples are all
that remain – probably a Water Dragon - but I am rewarded by a Little Shrike Thrush showing well a few
meters away.
On along the track and bugger all – the
cicadas now increasing their screaming as the heat climbs, until suddenly I
walk out of their territory and leave it all behind – really weird – they all
just stopped at a point in the track unremarkable for anything else but the
peace beyond it.
Back up the hill, sweat now very evident;
sit for 10 or 15 at Stu’s Raptor Watch Spot – nothing much moving but a
pleasant breeze. Down to the boardwalk and play for Spotless and Lewin’s
without result, a couple of Noisy
Friarbirds over the bike track and I pick up a single Comb-crested Jacana on the lake before heading home for breakfast
and shelter from the heat.
Day 1 Birding 2015 completed.